Density and transport mode choice in Australian, Canadian and US cities.

Auteur(s)
Mees, P.
Jaar
Samenvatting

This paper re-examines the relationship between population density and transport mode choice, taking another look at the ideas that have come to be known as the æcompact cityÆ. It begins by reviewing the origins of the view that density determines mode choice, and that viable public transport cannot be provided below a density threshold variously estimated at 30 to 100 persons per hectare. The claim has been widely made, but an examination of the alleged basis reveals multiple layers of citation ultimately deriving from a single source, the Chicago Area Transportation Study 1956. The CATS analysis erroneously attributed poor suburban public transport to low densities, when the real causes were failures of planning and policy. The paper then reviews the more recent data provided by Newman and Kenworthy, who found a similar relationship to that reported in CATS. Use of the most recent census data from Australia, Canada and the United States suggests that the Newman-Kenworthy data contained errors in the estimation of urban densities. When these are corrected, the results reveal only a very weak correlation between density and public transport use, and no correlation at all with walking and cycling. The paper concludes that the æcompact cityÆ notion is not substantiated by evidence. (a) For the covering record of the conference, please refer to ITRD no. E218380.

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Publicatie

Bibliotheeknummer
C 48681 (In: C 48649 [electronic version only]) /72 / ITRD E218366
Uitgave

In: ATRF 2009 : proceedings of the 32nd Australasian Transport Research Forum: the growth engine: interconnecting transport performance, the economy and the environment, Auckland, New Zealand, 29 September-1 October 2009, Session Tues 3a, 16 p.

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